Some
things you can infer from the comments on the club site; and when it reports on
BWP going on loan to Brentford for the rest of the season, with no mention of
recall clauses, and adds that his contract is up at the end of the season, even
I can guess that we have in all probability seen the last of him - and for the
last time sung that he’s better than Shaun. We will of course always think
fondly of him and wish him well, not just for the winner at Carlisle, while the
memory of his bloody awful penalty away at Notts County will, in time, fade
(after all, we have a French striker who apparently missed a penalty once).
For
the first half of last season he was superb, full of confidence and knocking
them in for fun. But after his drought that confidence never seemed to really
return and many chances went begging (his winner at Carlisle, from about a yard
out, had been preceded by him failing to convert a one-on-one). Whether or not
he could cut it at Championship level was a key issue for this season (I do
remember thinking at the time when Curbs said he’d put him in his fantasy team
on the grounds of him being a ‘goal machine’ that we’ll have to wait and see)
and, although the goal at home against Leicester boded well, we soon learnt
that sniffing around for Kermorgant’s knock-ons, taking advantage of crap
defending, and the periodic strike from outside the box might not be enough to
thrive against better opposition, while his hold-up play was never good enough.
It’s fair to assume that Sir Chris made his mind up not long into the season
and since then it’s been a case of Wright-Phillips being a fringe squad member
rather than the 20-plus goals lynchpin of the attack that we hoped.
He
clearly still has the time to prove he can make at least the Championship
grade. If he does it with Brentford, good luck to him. But unless I’m very
wrong (I always accept the theoretical possibility) it won’t be with us.
It
will be interesting now to see whether Green is loaned out, after the two were
about to join Swindon on deadline day, and, if so, whether this clears the
space for one to come in. Having Kermorgant, Fuller and Haynes available (and
there is Smith) and sometimes going for 4-5-1 (or variations) doesn’t point to
an obvious need for a fourth striker, but the injury records to date do suggest
a risk of being a bit thin on the ground. We shall see (as usual I’m not privy
to any inside information).
In
the interim, of course there is the small matter of Yann’s return to Leicester.
Sir Chris has made the appropriate comments about having moved on from that
penalty, but judging from the comments from some Leicester fans we chatted to
in the pub before the game at The Valley they might have a little further to go
in the adjustment process. Nothing that a hat-trick tonight for Kermorgant
wouldn’t cure.
If
that produces a glorious victory for us, there will be a little suffering
involved, not just for the Leicester fans. I have normal taste buds and a
proper palate, which means that cheese is disgusting muck. But I am ready to
accept that, however strange it may seem, some people apparently get enjoyment
from consuming the rotting concoction and it is sometimes a mild inconvenience
to be unable to stand being in the proximity of it, especially sitting in
France. So I do periodically check to make sure that my position is not based
on prejudice. I have promised my partner Suzanne that if we win tonight I will
try to eat a lump, with a large glass of St Joseph at the ready to try to wash
away the taste (and something bunged up my nostrils for obvious reasons). She is currently in a Lyon fromagerie selecting something 'suitable', having set off this morning with just a little too much enjoyment at the prospect for my comfort.
A
week working from Lyon is a delight, but there is the small matter of the
various tasks that Suzanne stores up for my arrival, just those odd jobs that
she seems unwilling to do. So to date I’ve fixed the shower, drilled holes in
the wall to be able to hang the stepladder (don’t ask), humped huge bags of
soil for some plant repotting, and of course carried all the bags when stocking
up on various animal parts on the Saturday Croix Rousse market shop. The
Thumper with various bits attached went down a treat but now it seems I’m
required to prepare the goat for tonight (apparently to insert bits of garlic
and persil – that’s parsley in the real world – into it and leave to marinate).
Oh, and go to the local market this afternoon to buy some fish, drill more
holes and put up some shelves, and sort out the electrician (who is arriving to
price up some work, which I am somehow supposed to communicate to him; if
Suzanne ends up with a new plug in the ceiling and a light strip at ground
level she only has herself to blame).
It
would have been good to report on a glorious victory for Lyon Duchere on
Saturday evening. But having held on for confirmation of no last-minute
equaliser at Hull and dashed to the ground, we witnessed what has to be said
was a game that will not go down as a classic. Duchere had a couple of weeks
without a match and it showed. They played out a 0-0 draw against Grenoble in
which neither goalkeeper had a save to make. Duchere did put one over the bar
from close range but the guy was offside anyway, Grenoble had one shot from a
free kick that went narrowly wide, and as the game wore on Duchere might have
nicked something from a set piece (the team has changed a bit since I last saw
them and they are a good deal bigger than before, and a bit more route one).
But they didn’t get a late break, and neither did we.
We
still have tonight to put things right, even if it means a rather nasty lump
going down my throat.
6 comments:
I am both suprised and a tad disappointed with your stance on the holey smelly stuff.... just when you thought you knew someone!
Nice and thoughtful words on BWP. I think we made good use of the song, but it is a shame that we probably won't be singing it again.
Enjoy Lyon.
Well CA, I was a picky child and was only once required (or rather induced with the offer of rewards) to eat a piece. If that wasn't enough, those curdled, warm bottles of milk at school, with the inch or more of gunk at the top, ended any chance of learning to tolerate let alone embrace the stuff.
The worst times are when you politely say 'no thanks, I don't like cheese', and the response is 'oh try this one, it really doesn't taste like cheese at all'. It would; and I can smell it from over here.
Well, BH, you clearly haven't tried Mascarpone...
Iberian Valley
IV, if I said that most yoghurt is just about OK but some truly borderline and some out of the question would that help? Creme fraiche can be tolerable if doused with lots of sugar. What has to be kept in mind is that even if you can manage to get past the smell there is the awful taste and the dreadful texture of the stuff.
Suzanne, while happy to consume any cheese on offer, continues to try to convince me that she is allergic to carrots. In the sense that being in the proximity to cheese makes me want to hurl I am allergic to it.
I think a nice large lump of ripe Gorgonzola while you enjoy Yann's performance and Haynes' screamer on the Player ;)
It proved to be a chunk of something called Comte, from Jura apparently. Never has a piece of it been embraced with such relish, nor spat out so quickly (the bread tasted like someone had wiped their shoes with it).
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